Fog of Division
America is tired. Not tired because we disagree, but tired because disagreement has been weaponized into division. The noise is relentless—headlines screaming, politicians pointing, social media boiling. But beneath the chaos, there is a deeper attack at work. It’s not really about left versus right, race versus race, or class versus class. The unseen enemy wages war against God, Family, and Country—the bedrock of who we are.
We all want the same thing: the freedom to improve ourselves, to build a better future for our children. Yet, we’ve been conditioned to see our neighbor as an enemy. The irony? The very labels thrown at us—fascist, oligarch, extremist—often mean the opposite of what’s being claimed. Let me show you what I mean.
Fascist Myth
Picture this: Denzel Washington, as Coach Boone, stands before his divided football team in Remember the Titans. White players on one side, Black players on the other, fists clenched, resentment thick in the humid Virginia air. Boone doesn’t yell. Instead, he takes them to the cemetery at dawn—the resting place of young men who killed each other in the Civil War.
“Fifty thousand men died right here on this field, fighting the same fight that we are still fighting among ourselves today.”
The air chills. The silence cuts. A truth impossible to ignore.
Now—let’s talk fascism. The term is thrown around daily as an insult, but here’s the irony: fascism often poses as progressive or revolutionary. It’s an authoritarian system that controls (but doesn’t always own) private enterprise, censors media and education, and crushes individual freedoms—justifying racism and bigotry in the name of national unity.
Here’s the twist history often hides: the KKK, Jim Crow, and segregation came from Democrats—the same party that now hurls “fascist” at anyone who stands for faith, freedom, and personal responsibility.
So why the confusion? Because division thrives on distortion. If you can label your opponent as evil, you never have to defend your own actions. Call your neighbor a fascist, and suddenly the real authoritarian tactics—cancel culture, censorship, mandates—look like noble defense while wrongly called “Democracy”.
The irony should sting. Just like those Titan players, you may have been taught to see your brother as your rival. But Coach Boone’s lesson rings true for us, too: the real fight isn’t left against right—it’s whether we’ll keep tearing each other apart long enough for the true enemy to win and enslave or kill us all.
Oligarch’s Playground
The champagne flows. The music thumps. Jordan Belfort, played by Leonardo DiCaprio, riles up his brokerage floor like a rock star preacher. “Sell me this pen!” he demands. Greed drips from every word, and his army of brokers obey like disciples chasing their next high.
This is the illusion of freedom—the appearance of opportunity while the house always wins.
Now, what is an oligarchy? It’s not just rich people. It’s when a tiny handful of elites control the levers of power—government, corporations, media, technology—and everyone else gets crumbs. The rules bend for the few while the many fight among themselves.
Sound familiar? Think of Russian oligarchs, billionaires who bought yachts while everyday citizens scrounged. Or closer to home—when Google and Facebook silence debate with the flick of an algorithm, when lobbyists write laws that benefit corporations over communities, when politicians serve donors instead of voters. That’s not capitalism. That’s oligarchy.
And here’s the irony again: the very voices screaming about the “Oligarchy” often cash checks from them. Hollywood elites, politicians in tailored suits, tech executives who lecture about equity while raking in billions. They blame capitalism for injustice while enjoying the perks of an oligarch’s monopoly.
The crowd in Wolf of Wall Street thought they were free—they were just pawns in Belfort’s game. And today, many Americans believe they’re fighting for justice while they’re being played by oligarchs who profit from division.
The truth? Oligarchs don’t care about left or right, red or blue. They care about distraction. As long as we’re yelling at each other, we’re not noticing their grip tightening to destroy beliefs in God, Family, and Country.
Free Speech and Responsibility
William Wallace, shackled and bloodied, stands before the crowd. The executioner raises his axe. The magistrate offers mercy—just kneel, confess, and your suffering ends.
Wallace’s voice thunders: “They may take our lives, but they’ll never take our freedom!”
The roar echoes through the centuries.
It’s raw, defiant, unforgettable. That’s the spirit we claim to honor with free speech.
But here’s today’s reality: after Charlie Kirk’s assassination, some openly celebrated online. A few of them were fired—not silenced by government, but held accountable under their own organization’s codes of conduct. That isn’t censorship. That’s consequences.
His assassination sparked outrage, mourning, and yes—debate. But notice something: the very people who mock, attack, and decry him as “dangerous” do so with complete impunity. No fear of censorship. No fear of jail. No fear of losing their platform.
Free speech isn’t about protecting popular opinions. It’s about protecting unpopular ones. If all we defend are words we like, then we’ve already surrendered the field.
And just like Wallace, the cost of standing for truth is high. But the greater cost comes from coerced silence—because censorship leaves our children to inherit chains instead of freedom.
War for Our Children
At its core, this battle isn’t about politics. It’s about inheritance.
Will we pass on a country where our children can dream freely—or a cage dressed as a playground? Will we give them the tools of faith, family, and skills—or the poison of indoctrination, division, and moral decay?
The war is for our children. The enemy knows it. That’s why classrooms are battlegrounds. That’s why the attack is against God, Family, and Country—the pillars that shield the next generation.
We don’t need to agree on everything. But we must agree on this: America’s strength is not in uniformity but in unity. We are not as divided as we’ve been led to believe. Black, white, left, right—we want the same thing: freedom to improve ourselves and a brighter future for our children.
The unseen enemy thrives on chaos, irony, and lies. But truth is still stronger. And the truth is simple: God gives us worth. Family gives us love. Country gives us freedom.
Defend those pillars, and the fog of division clears.
That’s leadership. That’s legacy.

